Paul Goble
Staunton,
March 31 – “At the stroke of midnight” today, Denis Krosheyev, Amnesty
International’s deputy director for Europe and Central Asia, says, “all but one
Crimean Tatar language media outlets, which have come under a sustained assault
since the Russian annexation, will fall silent.”
Despite
the efforts all of them have made to register, the occupation authorities will
now close down Crimean Tatar outlets in “a blatant attack on freedom of expression,
dressed up as an administrative procedure … to stifle independent media, gag
dissenting voices and intimidate the Crimean Tatar community” (amnesty.org/en/articles/news/2015/03/crimean-tatar-media-will-shut-down-as-arbitrary-registration-deadline-expires/).
Following
the Anschluss, Russian officials required all media outlets on the Ukrainian
peninsula to re-register. Pro-Moscow Russian-language channels, news services
and print publications have had very few problems, but Crimean Tatar outlets
have been “repeatedly and arbitrarily denied registration,” Amnesty
International says.
In the
best Soviet-era tradition that Vladimir Putin’s regime is increasingly
restoring, one Crimean Tatar outlet, the newspaper “Yeni Dunya,” will be
allowed to continue so that pro-Moscow trolls and supporters of the occupation can
point to it in order to deny that Moscow is conducting an ethnically-based
purge of the Crimean Tatar media space.
But that
is exactly what is going on. QHA, the largest Crimean Tatar news agency, has
been refused re-registration twice and has not reapplied, Amnesty noted. ATR,
the Crimean Tatar-language television channel, has been turned down three
times. It has applied a fourth time, but if it doesn’t hear by tonight, it too
will shut down lest it face heavy fines, the confiscation of its equipment, and
criminal charges against its mangers.
Other
Crimean Tatar-language outlets, including the Maydan radio, the 15minut.org
website, the newspaper “Avdet,” and the magazine “Yildiz” have not received
re-registration and will shut down. And in an indication of how sweeping this
Russian purge is, the occupation authorities have refused to register the
Crimean Tatar children’s magazine “Armanchikh” and the children’s television
channel, “Lale.”
“The fact that children’s television
channels and magazines are being forced to shut down may sound like a cruel
April Fools’ Day joke, but this is certainly no laughing matter,” Krivosheev
says. “Instead it heralds a latest stage
in an ongoing clampdown on human rights … the brunt of which is being felt by
the persecuted Crimean Tatar minority.”
And to add insult to this injury, the occupation authorities have taken the additional step of warning Crimean Tatar leaders not to protest these closures lest they run afoul of Russian “anti-extremism” law. As has become typical, the officials issued these warnings orally and refused to leave any documentation, undoubtedly so they can deny that they have in fact done so (khpg.org/index.php?id=1427798413).
And to add insult to this injury, the occupation authorities have taken the additional step of warning Crimean Tatar leaders not to protest these closures lest they run afoul of Russian “anti-extremism” law. As has become typical, the officials issued these warnings orally and refused to leave any documentation, undoubtedly so they can deny that they have in fact done so (khpg.org/index.php?id=1427798413).
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